There is no consensus concerning the ethnic identity of the people who made the pottery that has come to be known as “Crow” in Wyoming. Frison (1967) argued that sites such as Piney and Big Goose Creeks in the Powder River Basin represented the initial appearance of the people who came to be known as the Crow. Others have been highly critical of Frison’s (1967, 1976) interpretation (Johnson 1979; Wood and Downer 1977) arguing that the pottery could be affiliated with the Extended Middle Missouri (EMM) or Extended Coalescent traditions (ECT) of North and South Dakota. There is no question that Crow pottery shares many traits with Plains Village traditions, but it most closely resembles the pottery of the North Eastern Plains Village tradition (NEPV). Toom (2004) argues that the NEPV is the prehistoric manifestation of the Awaxawi and Hidatsa-proper, two of the three tribal divisions of the people collectively known as the Hidatsa. According to the Crow, they separated from the Hidatsa-proper in the distant past. The timing of the Crow-Hidatsa schism remains controversial (Johnson 1979; Mulloy 1942; Wood and Downer 1977).

Recent AMS radiocarbon dating from the Garett-Allen (48CR301) and Medicine Lodge Creek (48BH499) sites indicates that the earliest Crow pottery in Wyoming dates to around cal AD 1350, much earlier than Extended Coalescent, but contemporaneous with Extended Middle Missouri. However, check-stamped surface treatment is fairly common in Crow assemblages from Wyoming, but exceedingly rare at Extended Middle Missouri sites. Checked-stamped pottery is distinctive of and diagnostic to the NEPV where it is known as Owego ware (Toom 2004). This variety of pottery first appears during the middle NEPV (ca. 1200-1600) at sites in eastern North Dakota and western Minnesota. Owego ware comprised about 7 percent of the ceramic assemblages from the Naze (32SN246) and Hendrickson-III (32SN403) sites, which are dated to cal AD 1293-1407 and cal AD 1302-1367, 1382-1433. Given the stylistic similarities between Crow and NEPV pottery and the contemporaneity of the complexes, the data appears to support Frison’s hypothesis.

Crow pots are typically restricted orifice jars with pronounced shoulder junctures - often creating a distinct, angled, inflection point – and rounded to slightly conoidal bases. Rims are unthickened, straight, slightly curved or faintly S-shaped (aka recurved). Tempering material is almost exclusively crushed igneous rock (i.e. grit), but later specimens may include crushed quartzite. Vessels were produced using the lump-modeling-paddle and anvil technique resulting in walls that are typically thin (4-6 mm) and compact. Exterior surfaces are smoothed and occasionally burnished, simple-stamped or check-stamped. The stamped surfaces were usually smooth to some degree, often obliterating any evidence of stamping. The top, exterior and interior edges of lips are often decorated with incised parallel diagonal or horizontal lines or punctates. Incised geometric and/or curvilinear designs are also found on rim exteriors and shoulders.

1993KNRI and Upper Knife-Heart Region Pottery Analysis. In The Phase I Archaeological Research Program for the Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, Part III: Analysis of the Physical Remains, edited by F. A. Calabrese. Occasional Studies in Anthropology No. 27. Midwest Archaeological Center, Lincoln.

Alex, L. M.

1979The Ceramics from Ludlow Cave, Harding County, South Dakota. Archaeology in Montana 20:49-62.

Breakey, Kim and Stanley A. Ahler

1985An Analysis of Pottery from On-A-Slant Village, Fort Abraham Lincoln State Park, North Dakota. Journal of the North Dakota Archaeological Association 2:1-26.

Forbis, R. G.

1979‘Crow’ Pottery as Seen from Alberta. Archaeology in Montana 20:43-48.

Frison, George C.

1967Archaeological Evidence of the Crow Indians in Northern Wyoming: Astudy of a Late Prehistoric Period Buffalo Economy. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. University Microfils, Ann Arbor

1983 Chapter 9: Native Ceramics. In Archeological Excavations at the Mondrian Tree Site (32MZ58), Missouri River, McKenzie County, North Dakota.Contribution No. 193.Edited by Dennis L. Toom and Michael L. Gregg.Department of Anthropology and Archeology, University of North Dakota.Submitted to the Northern Border Pipeline Company, Omaha, Nebraska.

Lee, Chung Ho

1980Ceramic Analysis. In The Archaeology of the White Buffalo Robe Site: Volume I, Text.University of North Dakota. Submitted to Stearns-Roger Engineering Corporation, Contract No. R 806 C-15380. Copies available from the University of Texas, Austin.

Lovick, Steven K. and Stanley A. Ahler

1982Cultural Resource Reconnaissance in the Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site. Contribution No. 159.Department of Anthropology and Archeology, University of North Dakota. Submitted to U.S. National Park Service, Contract No. CX-6000-6-A061.Copies available from the Department of Anthropology and Archeology, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks.

Mulloy, William

1942The Hagen Site: A Prehistoric Village on the Lower Yellowstone. Publications in the Social Sciences No. 1.University of Montana, Missoula.